CustodyStress
Archive › Physical coercion
Part of the CustodyStress archive of observed Bitcoin custody incidents
CS-01273

Two women were arrested in Hong Kong for allegedly kidnapping a three-year-old child

Constrained
Case description
In July 2024, two women were arrested in Hong Kong for allegedly kidnapping a three-year-old child and demanding a ransom of over HK$5 million in cryptocurrency. The child was rescued unharmed, and both suspects were detained. The case illustrated the extension of cryptocurrency coercion tactics from targeting adult holders directly to targeting their family members—particularly young children—as hostages to extract payment. The case was consistent with a global pattern documented by Jameson Lopp of crypto-motivated kidnapping becoming an organised criminal tactic rather than opportunistic crime.
Custody context
Stress conditionPhysical coercion
Custody systemHardware wallet (single key)
OutcomeConstrained
DocumentationUnknown
Year observed2024
CountryHong Kong
Structural dependencies observed
Biometric or physical presence
What this illustrates
Access required in-person verification that couldn't be arranged under the circumstances. Whether full access was ultimately possible is unclear, but significant delay or outside intervention was involved.
Outcome interpretation
Access remained possible, but only with delay, dependence, or significant difficulty.
Source
Publicly Reported
Evidence type
News article
Related cases involving physical coercion
105 cases involve physical coercion 274 cases involve hardware wallet (single key) View archive statistics →
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Framework references
Terms guide
Survives
Access remained possible under the reported conditions.
Constrained
Access remained possible, but only with delay, dependence, or significant difficulty.
Blocked
Access was not possible under the reported conditions.
Indeterminate
There was not enough information to determine the outcome.
Single-person knowledge
Recovery depended on information or capability held by one individual who was unavailable.
Institutional dependence
Recovery depended on a third-party institution or service that was inaccessible or uncooperative.
Documentation gap
Recovery depended on instructions that were missing, incomplete, or unclear.
Authority mismatch
The person with legal authority to act did not have operational access, or vice versa.
Original text
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